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AND LOUNGING PAJAMAS Values to $9.50 Clearance $4.95 COTTON HOUSECOATS AND LOUNGING PAJAMAS Values to $6.95 Clearance $1.85 B.M. BEHRENDS CO., Inc. “Juneau’s Leading Department Store” JEFFREYS CELEBRATE | e My simpon, sl FIRST ANNIVERSARY | simpicins, dary 1ou AT PARTY SATURDAY |corrine genne, Mesedames Moy Last Satutday evening o party, was | Werner, Wesley . Murray, F given at the home of Miss Jean | Henry, H: 1, Bill . Winn, MecDonald on Marine Way in honor | Kimball, Sherwood Wirt of the first wedding anniversary of | Pall. Lyle Turner, Mr. and Mrs. Jack Jeffrey, Miss|Frank Paul, J. I W Jr McDonald, Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey 7 P e and William Trumbo were hostesses | DIVORCES GRANTED and hosts for the evehing. Follow-| Divoces have been ing the pa attended | Federal District Court to the American Legion Dance at the Strand from Cory Strand of Sit Elks Hall. on grounds of drunkenn Guests for the include | Tnga Brogwaret from Ir the Misses Mary rLe aret of Jwneau, charging Jeanne VanderLeest, Jean Gall ort. tR \Q'(' F"fi The delicate flavor and fragrance of Schilling Vanilla is a delightful addition to all desserts! It's especially good in home-made ice cream. Schilling Vanilla never freezes out nor bakes out. Look for the red Schilling package when you buy vanilla! Schilling Cinnamon and Nutmeg, like all other Schilling Spices, are pure and dependable—rich in spicy, lasting goodness— delightfully fragrant! fiTt;m;y Pu g;’l‘ i AS A PAID-UP SUBSCRIBER TO The Daily Alaska Empire AND RECEIVE TWO TICKETS TO SEE “NAVY BLUE AND GOLD" Your Nime May Appear—WATCH THIS SPACE DIMOND WARNS HOUSECOATS - ldemands unremitting watchfulness Elizabeth Ter-| arbara | et 3 ,I,‘,I‘_"I-Iu nal combat is the price of lib- Tom | €It and Henry Harmon, and Joe [battl Judge, | battle; Orrin | battle; and whenever the people of 30b Kim- | this land are unwilling Fergus Hoffman,|the last bit of their substance or anted in | proudest boa Nellie | doomed to death and oblivion, and , | this nation, like many another, will and to be merely the memory of a blasted| in Brog- hope, a shattered ideal, a noble am- non- | bition OF SUBVERSIVE FORCES AT WORK Delegate Hits at “Isms” in Forceful Independence Day Address Here (Continued from Page One) compromise, But of victor: eace not alone of victory, but what is far more important; of justice. On this day, above all others, we would do well to recall to mind the aims and ideals which were pro- claimed at Philadelphia on July 4, 1776, and for which so many have since fought and died. We should| here and now, to use the words of Yhe Jmmortal Lincolm, take re- newed devotion to the cause for which they then stood ready to give their last full measure of devotion,| the cause of freedom and justice. | Freedom and ju The words| ire so often on the lips of men that| we fail to realize their hnport.‘ Freedom. What is it? Any diction- ary can give us the definition. But | the freedom we value Is an ordered | freedom, an intelligent freedom, a freedom under which all may enjoy| life and attain the greatest possible| measure of happiness without any| restraints except those which bind each person as a member of society, and without any limitations of action or conduct except, such as are; necessarily imposed upon each in-i dividual in order that every other person ‘may .enjoy a like measure of freedom,” But this freedom does not mean unchecked license, and our devoton to the ideal of freedom ought not lead us to support those| who, under the protection of the ‘(]ag of our nation and the freedom for which it stands, seek to tear it down and to substitute for it |some other flag, red or black, the| |emblems, as we know by the ter- rible examples before oy very eyes, tof disorder and persecution, of ter- |ror and assassination, and of such |tyranny and oppression as to shock | the minds of civilized men | And today we should realize that| [the freedom which we value will not sustain itself; that it requires and and more. Some one has said that eternal vigilance is the price of lib- , but that is only half the truth. Our liberty was conceived in born in battle, preserved in and it must ever live by to spend | to shed the last drop of their blood {in the cause of their freedom, then ‘Ilml freedom, which is so justly our| t, will have been; for the happiness of man-| kind which has failed of its purpose | and its promise. We may rightly think of that freedom, not as a cold, dead insen- sate thing, but as warm, living, al- most incarnate, full of vigor and| life, and vitality; and because it is| alive, and in obedience to the very laws of life, fighting, fighting always that it may live and live only by its power to defeat its enemies. The freedem of the nation is con- stantly assailed both from within and from without. From within by those who enjoy the blessings of that freedom, but like detestable parasites seek to destroy that which gives them life and makes their ex- istence worth while; who clamor loudly for civil liberty for them- ‘selves in order that when they at- tain power they may kill all liberty; and from without by those who. mock at and deride the very idea of liberty and believe, with Napol- THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY e justice required is not merely the| enforcement of the stafite law, for that is a small, almost Infinitesimal part of it. Justice demgnds that we act in accord with its t:uu[ defini- tion, to render to everypne his due It is a great command, of r n as well as of consclence] which we should feel as keenly aAnd hear as clearly as though the voice of the eternal God Himself s e it to us. That command says to each of us today, render to everyone his due whether his skin be black, br: his yellow or white, and whatever |class, creed or circymstance. Be |just! And as we obey that divin volce we may confidéntly hope to be blessed with the pepce that pas- seth understanding, and if we long disobey it, then just as|surely as did the t; 1ts and the unjust of ancient times, just so surely hall we too tumble down into the dust. The fundamental principles of justice appeal to wusi with par- ticular force today.l Partly by reason of a deep and I:‘mnng: sense of economic injustice mecompanied by economic insecurity existing among a substantial number of our citizens, and partly by reason ol the naked lust for power of some of the leaders, clamorqus and in- sistent voices are heard around u. and among us, demanding the abandonment of our traditional principles of liberty; demanding, in effect, under one guise or another, the creation of an all-powerful, or totalitarian, state, wherein man would no longer be recognized possessing any ‘unalienable rights. These attacks upon our form of government, and upon its ideals of human liberty, take two particular modes, bitterly hostile to ¢ other, and yet identical in opera- tion and ultimate effect: onc of them is generally called facist, and the other communist. Both Facsim ‘and Communism are enemies of human liberty; one open and avowed; the other ret and insidious and cunning, alv boring from within. Facism pre- sents an ugly and brazen challenge to the very concept of individual freedom. Communism has a differ- ent and more deadly approach, seeking first to seduce and then to strangle liberty. It is difficult to say which is the more repulsive to those who love liberty, to those who revere the principles of the De- claration of Independence; bul | Communism works by concealment of its aims, works by indirection, by subterfuge and by outright false- hood, and may, therefore, be more immediately dangerous. Both arege- pressing examples of the enslaved mentality which would, if it could create another slave state. But aside from the leaders who are generally barren - minded en- thusiasts, or ruthless andgreedy for power, the followers of® (Mbse alien and slavish beliefs are mostly those unfortunates who feel themselves oppressed, and many of whom are dctually opppressed, by the injus- tice of the world, and who have thus lost confidence in democratic principles and processes, and in the ideal of liberty, and so follow blindly the leaders who promise all things to their adherents, promise the “kingdoms of the world and the glory thereof,” and ask in return one thing only: absolute and com- plete submission and obedience, in- volving the surrender of all liberty The conclusion seems inescapable that if Facism with its variant of Nazism, or Communism, shall ever prevail among us, it will be because | we have falled to promote and | maintain justice, and thus menl have become desperate. How necessary, then, if we are| to keep the political faith of our| fathers, that we should remove, so| far as is humanly possible, every | last vestige of injust economic | or otherwise, and thus preserve our | heritage, and prove once more that | only in liberty can man truly and reasonably engage in the “pursuit of happiness.” In addition to the hundreds , JULY 5, 1938. last defeat. ! Would not taste bitter' from a foe so brave, This boon I could not help but crave- Such foolish dreams a mother's thoughts employ Surrounded he, a dozen hoy! And yet I,know, I courage so, That when their dim seribed < God, he fought them all, fighting, died.” That what, this day means to That is what that dear flag mbolizes and typifies: courage and honor; all of our highest and best hopes and aspirations; all of our finest spiritual strivings and en- deavors; a union of more than one hundred millions of people, the regions of the dissclubly into a welfare to my who love through shapes t1 the were dawn de- rom all earth, bound in- society where the ne is universally held to be the welfare of all here if one member suffe all others suffer in unison; where if one is injured or| cppressed, all others will spring to arms for his defense; where free- dom reigns, and where justice, the justice of the eternal God, must and hall be made to prevail For such a cause, for such a coun- try, for such a faith, for such a flag, we are no longer startled or amazed at the heroism of Ameri- at the Belleau Wood or at Thiery, at St. Mihiel, and in the dark stretches of the ne Forest, But we take it as matter of course; 5 the natural and nor- mal conduct of men who In their lives gave that flag devotion, and who embattled, woun dying, on the torn fields of F 1wce and of Flanders, fulfilled its promise, tained its tradition and added to its imperishible_ glpry. {3 AAT SEAPLANES FLY STEADILY OVER HOLIDAYS holi- ca’s sons Chateau sus- Airplanes were busy over the days, carrying passengers to from Junean and island and int jor points. The following plane movements record the activity of the Alagka Air Transport planes and pilots: Sunday, Shell took the Lockheed out to ti islands with five pas-|\ sengers and returned with Glenn wrds from Hirst and P. M. Stewart, from Chichagof. On his re- turn he flew Mike Gavril and Bert Lybeck to Youngs Bay Lake Sunday evening Simmons flew to Hawk Inlet and refurn, Rosellen Monazle, Felix » Don- pero, Anacorte : Maida W ald Gray, Mrs. Felix Gray, J. L.!mot, Anacort o Freeburn and Pete Miller, the lat-|sunnyside. ter not returning zack, Seattle; Roberta Whitney Saturday night Shell flew Nor-!prontesano, Wash.: Norma Morri- man Banfield, J. E. Neate, L. E. g4on vett, Wash.; Beryl Long- Tucker, Harriet Ba r and E. W. | follow, Seattle; Merridy Gates, Pillman to Atlin. Brenierton, Wash |C Sunday night Simmons flew Al- Alaskan Delegate Here le vin Graves to Atlin and brought| griss Alcoyne Anderson, from th back Dr. Roth, Dorothy Durie, FIor-| g i hanks assembly was also @ ence Durie, Joe Ferguson, Joe Pal- mer, and Lena Bardi. Yesterday on another trip to At- lin, Leslie 1ds and Dr. Roth went in. Coming back were V. B. Fado- vich, Norman Banfield, J. E. Neate, E. Tucker and Harriet Barra- ar, Sunday morning John Amundsen vent to Elfin Cove on a c with J. O'Learly and Sig Anderson, and later went to Lake Hasselborg to pick up a fishing party. Sunday Doris Peterson, Mrs. Bez- marovich and Rade Cvetich were flown to Sitka, - .. - CANCO HERE OVER FOURTH OF JULY The 76-foot American Can Com- pany boat Canco, a trim yacht-like RAINBOW GIRLS taking out' Dines, ARRIVE ABOARD | DENAL! TODAY Miss Barbara Plenning | Heads Tour of Wash- } ington Officers Twenty-seven officers from var- |ious assemblies of the Order of | Rainbow Girls for the State of Washington, and their six chaper- ones, arrived in Juneau this morn- {ing on board the steamer Denali Headed by Miss Barbara Pfen- ning, Junior Past Worthy Adviso! |of the Grand Assembly in Wash- ington, the visitors were welcomed | iere by members of the local chap- ter of Rainbc and Eastern members of the tar, as well Masonic lod: Following a drive to the Menden- hall Glacier this morning, the of-| ficers were honored at a Iuncheon | at the Scottish Rite T after | which a and | hool of instructions, initiation were exemplified in {1 lodge room before members of the Juneau assembly. Dance This g This evening ¢ 7:30 o’clock 3 lected members from the Juneau chapter will receive the Gi u! Cross_of Colors, an hono - gree for distinguished service and will be ing officers. degree is public ented by the v lowing the ritualistic wc a danes, for which invitations have been is- sued, will be held in ‘the bailroom of the temple. Six Chaperones / rones for the tour are: Mr Morton, Wask Cha Jack Mrs. M. Wash.; Mrs. Grace Bulleman, C dive, Mon.; Mr. H. R. Gosse, tle; Dr. Joseph Gosse, New minster, B. C., and J. Barnes, erville, Wash. Members in Tour | Girls in the Rainbow | Misses Barbara | Wash.; Glen Eilen Day \’ | | i West- wat- | clude: Ellensbur Seattle Isab Gosse, Jowen, Pasco, Wash.; Miriam Lois Ward, Chelan, attle; h.; Jeanne Lon Pasco, Wi line Lotz, Chehalis, | Wash.; Patty Shaw, Yakima, W Barbara Holms, Omak, Wash.; othy Sisk, Seattle; Nona aterville, Wi Mariam Davie Phi > Schutz, Sunny Seattle; side, W« Wash.; , Wash ary Alice ; Ellen Lund- | enger on board the Denall today Miss Anderson has been attending oOf * U. 8. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, WEATHER BUREAU THE WEATHER (By the U. 8. Weather Burean) for Juneau and vicinily, b ing at 4 pm. July 5: We I moderate southeast winds, becom- Weather forecast lor Sout ska: Rain tonight, Weflnesday learing: modera h 1 ccept moderate to fresh over Dixon Entranc e Frederick S8ound and Chatham Strait esd: nd moderate to fresh southerly winds al, & ng northerly Wednesday. nds atong the Coast of the Gulf of Alaska: Moderate Jong the coast from Dixon Entrance to becoming w ver Lynn Ca ast of v soutk Hinehinbrook Cape becoming westerly Wednesday. LOCAL DATA Time Barometer Temp, Humidity Wind Velocity Weathes 4 pm. yest 30.19 53 49 8 8 Lt. Rain ¢ am. toc 3011 51 98 SE 8 Lt. Rain Neon toc $0.02 51 94 SE 12 Lt. Rain RADIO REPORTS i TODAY Max. temp. Low>st 4am. 4am. Precip, 4am Btation last 24 hours | temp. temp. velocity 24 hrs, Weather Atka 40 40 4 03 Pt. Cldy € 41 33 40 12 0 Clear 18 44 4 8 0 Cloudy 64 11 44 6 T Clear 3 46 14 0 40 Cloudy 52 52 6 06 Cloudy hor 13 10 44 4 01 Clear Kodiak ) 40 40 4 04 Cloudy Cordova 2 44 16 6 11 Rain Juneau 50 51 8 38 Rain Sitka 3 19 — 18 b 4 6 05 Rain R rt 64 0 02 Cloudy ’ ey 4 04 Pt.Cldy ( 8 ] r 1 [ 4 04 Clear San ¥ « ( 52 10 0 Cloud New York 6 64 14 0 Clear Washington 60 4 0 Pt. Cldy WEATHFR CONDITIONS AT 8 AM. TODAY seattle (airport) clear, temperature, 53; Blaine, cloudy, 51; Vie- toria, clear, 49; Alert cloudy, 47; Bull Harbor, foggy, 53; Triple Island, raining; Langa land, r Prince Rupert, misting Ketchikan ; Wrangell, cloudy, 54; Petershur clou Hoonah, mi; Althorp, r cloudy, raining, 50; Port ting; Hawk In- ining; Radioville, Haines, raining; Cape St. Elias, raining, 46; McCarthy, clou- cloudy, 48; Fairbanks, cloudy, 52; Hot Sprir cloudy, altag, cloudy, 55; Flat, ing, 45; Bethel, cloudy Platinum, cloudy. Juneau, July 6 , 3:03 a sunset, 9:05 p.m. WEATHER SYNOPSIS A € rea of high barometri ssure covered the Aleutian Is- rtion of e n fornia th Pacific Ocean and the ci srning with the highest reported pres- north, longitude 150 deg;: 5 central Canada. A trough from northern and interior last twenty-four hours light degrees ) high over rin the southern portion of Alaska and northern imbi ttered howers over the lower Mac- the Pacific Northwest and the wkatchewan. Temperatures were he upper ns of Alberta and Alaska yeste: MINING COMPANY, | GODDESS OF IIBERTY, CANNERY WORKERS 'ATTENDANTS LEAVE ON FILE ARTICLES HERE DENALI THIS EVENING Articles of n filed incorporation have h the Territorial Aud- ! local of the | y Workers Union, oup. Incorporators Cla Catherine Weimer 1d Elsie Sherwood. » Alaska Enterprise Mines, Inc., also filed, listing capital Herber Willson is Royaliy will ride the waves this evening when Miss Dorothy Ber- tholl, the Queen of Juneau’s Fourth who reigned over the celebration sterday, and her two attendants, ‘,\1.‘_» Corrine Duncan, and Miss ‘F,(ll(h Lindégard, board the steam- er Denali at midnight tonight fora round-trip cruise to Skagway as guests of the Alaska Steamship the Grand Assembly in We e, | as delegate from her chapter. The P R. Chambers, | Company. delegate from the Rainbow order ©¢ company operates| The royal party will return in Anchorage, Miss Patsy Bowker, in the reck district. Thursday. ise: -0 - - Sl s at the is also attend Masonic Temple today The Washington officers will leave for way midnight will pass through Capital Cit} on the southbound voyage of the steamer on Thursday. YACHT ELECTRA BRINES INJURED Today": Today.—Empire. ry an Empire ad. who heard Mr. Dimond at the park st'x'Yiro (‘.mf(. Capt. M. D. Stewart, countless others were afforded op: arrived in Juneau Saturday after- | portunity to hear the Im!ependence‘““o" and spent the holiday here. GIRL TO JUNEAY A —r is invited to present this coupon tonight at the box office of *“CAPITOL THEATRE eon, that God is on the side of the|Day address through the facilities| heaviest cannon. This day will have|of radio station KINY which had failed of its lesson and its meaning| been extended to the recreation| if we do not here and now resolve|park by Manager C. B. Arnold. | to be eternally vigilant and to| Nor should this day pass without| eternally do battle with all of the|a prayerful thought for those who| dark and malign forces which open-|made the last great sacrifice that | 1y or covertly assail our freeddm. |this Aation might become and re- Nor should we be s3 unintelli-{main free—the dear, the gallant gently selfish as we think of our-{dead. We do not honor them be- selves alone. By the highest laws|catise they are dead. No, they hold of morality, as well as by the rules| high place in our thoughts, &nd they of enlightened self-interest, we|dre deserving of our eterpal grati- hould give falr and sympahetio|tude, because they fought for a consideration to the welfare and{great, a noble belief and idedl, and aspirations for liberty of others. In|becauise they had the courdge to die| modern times every part of the civi- | for it. After all, humanly speaking, lized world has its impact, social and|courage is among the grandest of politicdl and écoriomical, upon every|the things of life, for nothing that cther part. Common sense suggests|is worthwhile can long survive with- that we cccasionally look beyond the|out it. The value of courage as a boundaries of our own village, or|motive of the most admirable human city, or state, or nation, and there,|conduct, is touchingly expressed in perhaps, to our advantage and en-|verse that was, I believe, written dichment, we may find in other|during the World War, in which a peoples or in other lands something | mother is made to speak of her dead worthy of our admiration or charity,|son. I quote: or pity; or something so horrible| “And so T did not cease to build that we shall be more than ever de- about my splendid boy great ernmined to prevent a similar com- towers of prayer; that he dition from arising in our own land might fight with courage high; o curse us with its evil. .| And that if need be, he might And then justice! What is justice? bravely die. As we all know, justice in its uni-| I prayed that he might fight, sersal sense means rendering to if die he must, :very one his due. It is in the nature| Matched man to man, with hope | of a great and general law which in every thrust; ve aré bound in Honor and in con-| That in his last encounter he clence to observe—to render to should meet averyone his due. It is not sufficent| A man who fought with grave to establish political freedom, and and gallant grace, cest there, at the same time pérmit-| And as the blows fell, in the ting econol servitude, for the other’s face 1 he lat- ter is an offehge against justice. ’l‘hh1 Be written admiration, so the Aboard the craft were service| men H. L. Paulsen, Irwin Fowler | and Clarence Bellis. | The Canco left this ofternoon for Icy Straits canneries. - - JUNIOR C. D. A. | RETURNS SUNDAY | FROM CAMP TRIP| | With reports of fair weather and| a good time, the Junior holic Daughters returned from their two weeks' encampment Sunday just in| time to get in on the Fourth of July! celebration. | The two weeks was filled with ac- tivities which included in the| schedule swimming instruction, with Mrs. Howard. Hayes as director cf activities. The prize shoes which were of- ferred by the Devlin Shoe Store for the girls having the least num- ber of deferits at the close of the two weeks was awarded to Coleen Hellan, having a perfect record. It| was a close run with many of the girls having but one mark to their names. | During the camping period those | mothers and members of the C. D. A. who acted as supervisers include | Mrs. John Tandoo, Mrs. John Klein, |Mrs. James McAlister and Mrs. who was. interested in the Chi- Chartand. | Girls attending the summer en-| campment were Dorothy and Cecilia | Thibodeau, Pat and Kay McAlister, Eileen and Coleen Hellan, Odessa | Schneider, Theresa Doogan, Donie | Jean Klein, Kanda Clareto and Pat Gullefsen, |daughters, aboard the Electra, are, 1 Empire classifieds pay. Peggy Rust guflers Back Laceration — Shell Makes Mercy Hop The big Tacoma yacht Electra, | owned by Mrs. Arthur Rust, w in | Juneau “over the week-end while | Mrs. Rust’s 10-year-old daughter, Peggy was given medical attention | for a deep laceration of the hip | suffered in a fall at Tebenkoff Bay | Friday. : Late Friday night, Shell Simmons dnswered a wire from the Rust yacht and flew Dr. W. P. Blanton | and Dr. C. C. Carter to Tebenkoff Bay on the north end of Kuiu Island to freat what was believed | to have been a broken back for the | Rust girl. Injury was found to be only the | deep gash received when Peggy fell from beach logs and Simmons and the. doctors flew back without the child, leaving her aboard the yacht. | The yacht arrived in Juneau Sun- | day and after the child's wound | had been dressed again, sailed to- day for Taku Glacier and then to Chichagof, continuing a leisurely eruise of Southeast Alaska waters. Mrs. Rust is the widow of Arthur Rust, prominent Tacoma financier, chagof Mining Company, and died a year ago. With Mrs. Rust and her three Mr. and Mrs. H. A, Hill and young son. — e ALL-WHITE BEAUTY IVATOR SHING . ‘ACFION LOVELL SAFETY WRINGER QUIET WASHING OPERATION - PERMADRIVE MECHANISM GENERAL ELECTRIC MOTOR RE AQUICK-EMPTYING PUMP 3 GENERAL ELECTRIC Y GUARANTEE + Also available with SOLD ON EASY. TERMS ALASKA ELECRIC LIGHT & POWER CO. Juneau— Alaska————Douglas Nl o S n iy R Lt Vit